Political & Social Sciences

This content suggests a practical procedure to apply economic equality as a right. Many have fought for the scraps of the influential, misunderstanding the acquisition of materialism to be the only influential value, while their inborn right to an equitable influential value go unrecognized and therefore do not exist. We have proven our social potential to exist as a known positive quantity. If this were not true, civilization would not be occurring. Derived by the positive contribution of our p... more

Drawn To Change is an artist's take on what it means to be creative in a world that is constantly changing.
We are taken on a wild ride through the depths of Western culture to discover that we are much more restrictive to creativity than we'd like to believe, and tend to resist change rather than acknowledge it.
To understand this resistance, we are forced to confront social norms such as education, competition, language, money, ideology, society, reality and even the meaning of creativit... more

Fresh out of law school, Scott Cole raced to rally for a town sitting in the path of airborne toxins for generations. On behalf of many in the town, Scott filed a billion-dollar class action lawsuit against the Unocal petroleum refinery in the San Francisco Bay Area. Fallout is the story of a young lawyer partnered with a community of thousands to expose one of California's wort environmental tragedies. It is the true accounts of one young lawyer standing up against a corporation and saying "eno... more

A razor-sharp and serious look at the 2016 election and events since. There really isn't another book like it; a fierce cocktail of Thom Paine and Lewis Carroll, ending with a potent “Get Out The Vote” call using the fighting words of the Declaration.

It pithily covers: the Russian sabotage, the Electoral College TKO catastrophe, the anti-US, anti-democratic and corrupt practices of this Administration and the Republicans currently in Congress, Trump&rsq... more

In spite of its success, the flaws in our democratic decision making have led to tens of millions of unnecessary deaths in the last 50 years alone. Each and every year globally our poor democratic process squanders many trillions of dollars which could be otherwise spent for the benefit of all. This book outlines the many consequences of our current poor democratic process and presents a compelling case for change. The underlying problems within our democratic process are then identified, and si... more

Government regulations are increasingly holding back economic development, inflating the prices of most consumer goods, and reducing our freedoms. Dale W. Cox and his wife, LeAnne, know that firsthand as they have operated business of various types throughout the years. What they've found is rules and regulations that constantly change and get more complicated, which hurts their businesses, their family, and their customers. In this book, Cox gives a detailed account of how these regulations ... more

In his new book, Why Black Lives Do Matter, noted political analyst Earl Ofari Hutchinson, takes a laser look at the history of, and continuing propagation, of gross racial typecasting and stereotypes, that have made African-Americans the perennial target of racial and police violence.
The book is sweeping in scope, precise in focus, and even hits harder on the same devastating racial stereotypes of Blacks that he examined almost a quarter century earlier in his important work, The Assassina... more

Have you had enough? When will the United States government stop growing? All constitutionally enumerated activities should have been in place long ago. There should be no more expansion in scope, yet there is. What we have now is an overbearing out-of-control central government—expanding far beyond constitutional limits—imposing on member states’ sovereignty. The result is a reduction in competition among states, a stifling business environment, and citizens and businesses suffering under compl... more

For seventy years, we have been taught that Jesus died on the cross from asphyxiation (strangulation) because in the hanging position he was unable to exhale. This theory is not based on sound science. This book explains the medical cause of Jesus?s death and why even Pilate was surprised how soon Jesus had died. The dramatic changes that took place in Jesus?s body from the Last Supper until death are described in layman?s terms. To add to the injustice, Jesus?s condemnation to death was illegal... more

Middle class prosperity grew after the Great Depression and began declining in the 1980s. Today most Americans live paycheck to paycheck. What happened and how will Americans thrive as robots threaten their jobs? We Can Fix It : Reclaiming the American Dream is an informative, yet quick-reading, book that tells how our system broke, explains our current peril, and shows how we can reclaim our American democracy. The book draws from history, economics and neuropsychology, and includes a bibliogra... more

The future is being stolen from the millennial generation. Baby boomers have much to answer for: a legacy of economic instability, poor job growth, and an environmental disregard. Confessions of an Old Man is a statement of collective guilt that places the responsibility on the author's generation for dealing a bad card to its children.

This is a call to action for the MI generation (defined as those born between 1980 and 2018) - a generation with the most to lose if the Un... more

Do you take your phone to the toilet every morning?
Do you eat motivation lists for breakfast?
Do you have withdrawal symptoms without social media?
If you answered ‘yes’ to the questions above, this humorous book is for you.
Funny and satirical, 'Yes, The Eggplant is A Chicken' is full of humor and takes a jab at the online lives we lead. A collection of humorous essays, the book also presents the hilarious inner conflicts of ordinary people and their extraordinary social lives. The w... more

STOPPNow - An average of 115 people die a day from opioid drug overdoses. Every single one of those deaths is preventable - if human life is valued over profit. In her searing and intimate book "STOPPNow" (2017, RoseDog Books), Janet Colbert describes her battle against the pill mills who supply, the physicains who prescribe, and the politicians who do nothing. Colbert has seen firsthand how opioids have destroyed lives and the community. Colbert has appeared in the Sun-Sentinel, on WSVN -TV - 7... more

Save America From Itself is a straight-talking series of essays. It’s easy reading. But this book pulls no punches. Picture friends sitting around the kitchen table or in the local pub, and they’re dissecting politics, politicians and government in the manner of people who feel comfortable saying exactly what they think. Actually, picture a sledgehammer!
What makes his book different than other current political offerings is that in the first part, Christopher gives multiple examples of th... more